The Chronicle

Police get smart with speeding

- MICHAEL NOLAN

YOU cannot lay the blame for a traffic crash on a bad road as all motorists should drive to the conditions.

This was the message from Darling Downs Police ActingInsp­ector David Campbell as he implored motorists to make better decisions during Road Safety Week.

It comes as police identify speeding as the leading cause of fatal crashes across all age groups and background­s.

It is the most deadly of the Fatal Five.

“Speeding is always up there,” A/Insp Campbell said.

“From the moment someone gets their licence.”

A third of all fatal traffic crashes in the Darling Downs in 2020 were the result of drivers pushing past the speed limit.

Half of those crashes occurred in 100km/h zones.

A/Insp Campbell said it was a serious problem in rural areas, with one third of fatal crashes occurring on gravel roads.

“Just because it’s a 100km/ h road does not mean you should drive at 100km/h – you must have regard to wildlife and the conditions,” he said.

Police are well aware of the dangers of speeding on rural roads and adjust their enforcemen­t to stamp it out.

A/Insp Campbell said police placed speed cameras along roads that were hot spots for fatal and serious traffic crashes, as well as those that attracted speedsters.

“We do get complaints from the community, and we act on those,” he said.

“All of our enforcemen­t is aimed at changing behaviour – when someone drives past another person who has been intercepte­d then they tend to slow down.”

Worryingly, speeding is often combined with other dangerous behaviour, including distracted driving, drink and drugged driving and failing to wear a seatbelt.

“As soon as you mix one, two or three of those Fatal Five factors, you’re really increasing the risk of death,” A/ Insp Campbell said.

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